Sports
Duke’s Cooper Flagg has put exclamation point on 2025 NBA Draft No. 1 pick status
Throughout the season, Duke freshman forward Cooper Flagg has been considered the 2025 NBA Draft’s likely No. 1 pick. Beginning the season at 17 years old after reclassifying into the 2024 recruiting class, Flagg is among college basketball’s youngest players, and his season started with some growing pains. He averaged 15.2 points while shooting 44 percent from the field and 27 percent from 3 during his first seven games in November, turning the ball over three times per game. It wasn’t a bad start, as he also averaged eight rebounds, four assists, 1.4 steals and 1.4 blocks. But publicly — if not necessarily in NBA front offices — questions arose as to whether he was a truly elite prospect.
At the same time, Rutgers guard Dylan Harper emerged as a possible challenger at No. 1 throughout that first month. He averaged 23.3 points, 4.8 rebounds and 4.2 assists while shooting 52 percent from the field and 35 percent from 3 in his first 12 games, including back-to-back 36-point and 37-point performances that were heavily attended by NBA personnel in Las Vegas against Notre Dame and Alabama. As those factors emerged, NBA front-office sources remained steadfast that Flagg was the No. 1 pick. They were willing to entertain that Harper could pass Flagg by the end of the year, but every NBA executive and scout with whom I spoke in December said that, if the draft were held then, Flagg would go No. 1.
Since then, the questions have faded. Barring injury, Flagg will go No. 1 in the 2025 draft because he’s turned on the jets and, at just 18 years old, morphed into arguably the best player in college basketball. In the eight games since Dec. 16, Flagg has averaged 23 points, seven rebounds, 4.5 assists, 1.6 steals and one block while shooting 55 percent from the field, 50 percent from 3 and 89 percent from the line. We haven’t seen a freshman perform quite like this since a monster mid-January to mid-February run from Zion Williamson in 2019 when he averaged 25.7 points, 8.8 rebounds, 2.2 assists, 2.6 steals, 2.2 blocks and became a national phenomenon. Flagg has entered that territory and, in totality, has arguably been better than what Williamson — and every other recent collegiate one-and-done first-round pick — was through his first 16 games.
Nick Kalinowski created a graphical representation of how Flagg’s rolling performance markers early in the season compared to No. 1 picks Williamson, Cade Cunningham, Deandre Ayton, Ben Simmons, Karl-Anthony Towns, Markelle Fultz and Paolo Banchero by using my colleague John Hollinger’s Game Score metric. It’s a short-hand look more than a complex evaluation, and it’s worth noting the monster run of games mentioned above for Williamson started right after his first 15 games. But to this point, Flagg, who just turned 18 on Dec. 21, is ahead of everyone’s pace by a significant margin following his monster 42-point outing against Notre Dame last weekend.
Following up on my previous chart, I wanted to see how Cooper Flagg’s performances through 16 games stacked up against recent NCAA number 1 overall draft picks.
The answer: he’s right on schedule. Arguably ahead of it. https://t.co/MgPQPW9p4T pic.twitter.com/TjY6HhD6Ow
— Nick Kalinowski (@kalidrafts) January 15, 2025
That chart also shows that Flagg isn’t stagnating; he’s getting better every time he takes the court, as he showed in Saturday’s game against Boston College where he scored 28 points and had five rebounds, four assists, two steals and two blocks. It’s as if he took the time over Duke’s non-conference schedule to understand the speed of the game and compute how he needs to play, then over his last month has figured out how to dominate within that construct. He’s somehow showcasing himself to be an even more intriguing prospect than what was expected coming into the season from NBA evaluators, and in that time, it’s not an accident that Duke has emerged as arguably the best team in college basketball.
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College basketball Player of the Year odds: Can anyone catch Cooper Flagg?
Let’s dive into what makes Flagg so special, and why the race for the No. 1 pick, barring a catastrophic turn of events, is essentially over.
Improvement as a shot creator
Entering the season, scouts knew Flagg would be productive on both ends and his athleticism and motor combination would allow him to dominate some games. We knew he’d be excellent in transition, and that he’d be able to consistently generate scoring chances off offensive rebounds, cuts and straight-line drives when the defense is already tilted. But there was a question regarding Flagg’s skill level when it came to creating his own shot in half-court situations. Flagg improved in this respect over his final year at Montverde Academy. There were many more possessions where you’d get a chance to see him isolate or play in ball screens and be asked to get his own look either by driving to the rim, getting to his midrange jumper or drawing a foul. But he wasn’t exactly a fully developed player in this respect, and with him choosing to enter college at 17 years old, questions existed as to how effective he’d be getting to his spots and finding opportunities to score.
At Duke, particularly over the last month, Flagg’s ability to create looks for himself has been wildly impressive. More than anything, the versatility on offense shines. Flagg will grab a defensive rebound and push the ball up to try to create an early shot. Then, if Duke doesn’t have numbers, he’s happy to pass it to a guard or initiate the action himself, flow into a ball screen and driving to try to score that way, hit a kickout to a teammate or reset the offense. If teams play drop coverage against him, he can stop and pop for a midrange jumper or try to turn the corner. If they switch against him, he can attack mismatches big and small, either elevating over the top of a guard for a shot or powering through one for a layup. If it’s a big, he’s typically able to get around him with a quick crossover. Sometimes, he’ll decide to post either of them, knowing he can bully his way to the rim against a guard or use his footwork to get to the rim against a big.
Below is a prime example of Flagg putting together just about all of these skills into one clip. He’ll grab this rebound against Notre Dame and push out in transition. He immediately sees what he considers to be a mismatch, so he rejects a potential Khaman Maluach ball screen and hits a nasty right-to-left crossover to drive. Notre Dame decides to switch its big onto Flagg as Maluach attempts to seal the guard, so Flagg decides to go to work on the block instead. He plants on his right foot, reverse pivots, then takes a big step with his left foot and lowers his shoulder into 6-foot-10, 250-pound big man Kebba Njie and creates some space for a hook finish.
Flagg is the contact initiator most of the time, which is unsurprising given his motor and competitiveness. However, Flagg also has worked hard on his balance and coordination over the past year. The improvement in Flagg’s footwork is the biggest area that has allowed him to take a leap. He’s always been solid with these little step-throughs, pivots and gathers, but he’s become even more adept at them over the last month as the game has slowed down for him.
Below is another example from that 42-point explosion, where Flagg comes down the court, takes a screen and gets a switch onto undersized Notre Dame guard Markus Burton. As guard Sion James rolls to the corner following his screen for Flagg, his man, Tae Davis, sags off him and helps onto Flagg to account for the 6-foot Burton. From there, Flagg jump stops, reverse pivots, then strides out to get loose for a beautiful 8-foot floater coming from his right hand off his right foot.
Consistently, Flagg is using his combination of size, coordination, balance and explosiveness to get loose. Duke coach Jon Scheyer deserves a lot of credit here, too. He has been running a number of these kinds of actions to get Flagg into advantageous mismatch situations. Early on, against Kentucky and Kansas, the offense would bog down a bit because Flagg was still learning how to separate from his man, how to read defenses and how to play through contact. But Duke has won 12 straight games (and owns the fourth-best offense in the country per KenPom’s adjusted efficiency metric) in part because of those early growing pains that included a tight five-point loss to Kentucky and an even tougher three-point loss to Kansas.
Beyond the pivots and reverse pivots, though, Flagg also showcases real comfort in NBA-level sets. Below is an Iverson concept that NBA teams run regularly, especially early in quarters to get their best players looks. Tyrese Proctor Iverson cuts around to the left side of the court before Flagg does the same to the right side. He catches a cross-screen from Maluach, but Pitt’s Cam Corhen is able to fight through it and stay in front, so Flagg right-hand drives, stops, hits a behind-the-back crossover, then steps back for a beautiful midrange jumper over Corhen. NBA teams will run actions like this for Flagg, and this provides clear evidence that he can be immensely successful in them.
This improved scoring ability also has led to more passing angles being open for Flagg. He’s always had good vision and has been unselfish, but as defenders sell out even more to stop him by loading up the paint, he’s been able to find easier kickouts and passes to his teammates. Here’s another full example of the Flagg experience from the Boston College game, as he’ll anticipate a pocket pass to a rolling Chad Venning, swat his shot at the rim, get the ball at the top of the key, then survey the defense. This is an extremely simple pass, but look at how he manipulates the defender on the left wing with his eyes, making him sag into mismatch on the interior to help his guard. Isaiah Evans times his lift to the wing perfectly, and Flagg hits him for a wide open 3. It’s subtle but important stuff that shows he understands how to make defenders do what he wants them to do.
Flagg also has dropped his turnover number to about 2.2 per game over his last 11 games. He’s consistently making the right reads, and he’ll also make reads beyond the normal reversals for assists. Here’s one against Miami where he attacks the paint off a swing pass to the corner. He jumps in the air and feels the Miami help defender rotate to him at the rim, so he jumps to create an angle for his pass. As he jumps, look at how he scans the entire court in the air. He starts in the weakside corner before twisting to the opposite wing and finding an open shooter on the same side in Mason Gillis.
Per Synergy, Flagg has 15 assists this year out of ball screens, where he’ll be asked to create a majority of his plays in the NBA. Of those 15, 13 have been him hitting a roller to the rim, with many being out of a specific set to find either Maluach or Maliq Brown. Where Flagg is really starting to show improvement is in his ability to look outward for kickouts in addition to finding dump-offs or rolls off his drives. Indeed, Flagg is getting better as a playmaker for others in the same way he is as a playmaker for himself.
Improvement as a shooter
The other big question regarding Flagg coming into the year was his ability to shoot, particularly from 3. Over the past two years within Synergy’s database, including 71 games of competition across high school and AAU basketball, Flagg shot 33.9 percent (71 of 209) from 3, a mark that isn’t particularly terrible for seasons that encompass a player’s age-16 and age-17 years. However, where the rest of the questions with his shooting came were in regard to his form. He has a funky load into the shot and an abnormal release.
At Montverde, Flagg had a bit of a pause as he caught the ball and brought it to his shooting pocket, brought the ball to the side of his head and would finish very high. He clearly has touch as a shooter, but the mechanics and the way his arms loaded into the shot at least made scouts wonder if mechanical tweaks would be necessary to iron out his consistency.
Indeed, Flagg has made some tweaks to the jumper. First, his shot prep is better, and he’s removed that little hitch as he brings the ball into the shooting pocket. Second, he’s brought his shooting pocket farther away from his face and heightened the release point a bit, and the shot looks much cleaner as a whole. Here’s a shot from the recent game against Pittsburgh where he drills one off movement, as he comes off a down screen to the top of the key, catches and fires smoothly in one motion the way scouts want to see.
Flagg started the season poorly from 3 as he worked to find his mechanics, hitting just 22.2 percent of his 3s over his first 10 games. But over his last eight games, he’s made 50 percent from distance, and his overall 3-point percentage has jumped to over 34 percent. In total, he’s made 37 percent of his 3s off the catch. While there’s real reason to be skeptical that Flagg is a legitimate shooter right now, his mechanical tweaks in addition to this run of confident shooting from behind the arc has given NBA evaluators real confidence there’s a lot to work with in regard to Flagg’s shooting. At some point, it feels likely he will become at least a solid shooter.
Tying the two sections above together, ultimately the major question scouts had about Flagg entering the year was whether he had potential to be a No. 1 option on offense after further development in the NBA. Is there a world where he could become the kind of big-wing, mismatch-nightmare shot creator who leads a team to a title? Sources across the league will offer mixed answers on if they ultimately believe he will be that kind of player, but most scouts across the league who have seen Duke will tell you they believe Flagg has a chance to become that kind of player down the road.
His play this year on offense has lifted his stock because there is more hope that Flagg can be a No. 1 option. And even if teams end up wanting to pair an elite guard or elite big shot creator with him to ballast his offense, Flagg’s game to this point indicates that he’ll have no issues being a No. 2 option on a truly great team.
The easiest way to explain scouts’ perspective on Flagg is this: His ceiling is quite high, but he also has an incredibly high floor, possibly higher than any No. 1 pick who has entered the NBA in a long time. That’s because…
There are few other questions
Given his improvement on offense, it’s hard to find the flaw in Flagg’s profile.
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Defensively, Flagg is an excellent player. He probably hasn’t been the truly dominant defensive player he showcased himself to be at times in high school, but he’s very good. He communicates loudly and makes sure his teammates know where he is and what’s coming for them. He diagnoses his reads rotationally and scrambles well. He rebounds well for his position and also rebounds out of his area. Sometimes, Flagg will get overly aggressive and close out too heavily, but he always fights back in recovery and plays hard. He’s an elite playmaker patrolling the back line to protect the rim in last-ditch moments, and he has elite hand-eye coordination that allows him to shoot passing lanes and often get home without gambling too heavily.
One note from scouts on Flagg’s defense has been that they question whether he’ll be an elite on-ball defender in the NBA. He doesn’t seem to flip his hips particularly quickly and tends to play a bit high in his stance. He’s not inflexible, but he doesn’t quite display the same flexibility fighting through screens that the best wing defenders in the league such as Houston’s Amen Thompson, New Orleans’ Herb Jones and others do. Flagg will be effective on the ball because he competes, but he might be more of a player who excels patrolling space and playing against the opposing team’s worst offensive player so that he can help off his man and fly around to wreak havoc.
More than anything though, the intel on Flagg is among the best I’ve ever gotten on a prospect. He comes from an excellent family in Maine that supports him and has instilled an immense level of competitiveness within him. He works incredibly hard. His basketball character is off the charts. All he cares about is winning games. And he lifts the level of everyone he’s around both in practice and games because of how hard he plays. When I talked to Scheyer in the preseason, he said his favorite thing Flagg has brought to Duke is “straight up competitiveness.”
“On a daily basis,” Scheyer said. “In every drill, in every breakdown, in every five-on-five. He knows no other way. It’s an amazing quality to see and coach.”
Flagg is the exact player teams look for at the top of the draft. He might not necessarily be on Victor Wembanyama’s level as a can’t-miss player, but he’s clearly the kind of Tier One prospect every team would love to acquire. His presence is why we’ve already started to see a race for the bottom in the NBA much earlier than normal, with the Brooklyn Nets trading away some of their best players before the calendar turned to 2025 and the Washington Wizards having no fear running out teenagers in their starting lineup all season. Beyond Harper, I have some questions about how happy a majority of these teams will be to come away with consolation prizes in the class.
But Flagg is a player worth tanking for, even if the best odds any organization will have is a 14 percent chance on draft lottery night.
(Top photo of Cooper Flagg: Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images)
Sports
Martin Odegaard’s Real Madrid move revisited 10 years on – and why it didn’t work out
Mop-haired and dressed in jeans and a black-and-white striped sweater, 16-year-old Martin Odegaard looked like a student walking the streets of Madrid.
But this was no ordinary teenager.
Ten years ago today, Odegaard was in the Spanish capital to be presented as Real Madrid’s new £3.5million ($4.3m at the current exchange rate) signing, the club having beaten a host of European football’s other big beasts to buy one of world football’s brightest prospects from Stromsgodset in his homeland of Norway.
Flanked by Madrid’s communications director, he sat in silence for more than a minute as a cacophony of camera shutters clicked in front of him. Not entirely sure where to look, what to do with his hands or whether to wear the headphones he had been given for translation, a 15-minute press conference with the world’s media soon commenced.
He had not long been told about the event he was to attend. Once off the plane, there was no stop at a hotel for a briefing and no club tracksuit offered before he was taken to the Bernabeu, Madrid’s home stadium, and placed in a chair with a microphone in front of him.
Odegaard’s upbringing and temperament meant he was not overawed but it seems unthinkable today that more care would not be taken in preparing so young a player for such an experience.
Perhaps it was thought that ‘civilian’ clothes and scruffy hair would present him as a teenager with boyish potential, whereas a glossy makeover would risk hurriedly packaging the kid as Madrid’s next galactico-in-waiting.
It was to be that very dilemma, of how to pace his ascent to stardom, which paralysed his six years as a Madrid player.
But how did such a talented player, who has proven he can excel at the elite level over the past three years as Arsenal captain, not do it at the club who invested so much into signing him to begin with?
Odegaard’s name had started to reverberate around European scouting circles in 2012, when he was just 13 years old but already training with Stromgodset’s first team. The secret was out and so the competition began with the red carpet rolled out by virtually every major club. His father said they received more than 30 official offers come the end of their tour.
“There was a meeting in my living room, with me, the Norway national team coach, Martin and his dad,” says Jan Aage Fjortoft, Norway’s team manager from 2014.
“We were discussing his options, which was like choosing between The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Elvis Presley. I still have two lists: the four I thought he should choose between and the four I guessed he was thinking about.”
Bayern Munich, Real Madrid, Arsenal and Liverpool made the final shortlist.
Odegaard was a player rubber-stamped by Madrid’s renowned chief scout Juni Calafat and the club’s offer included the guarantee he would train with the first team. They were also the only one of the four contenders to have a B team, which was coached at that time by legendary former player Zinedine Zidane, who had made a point of introducing himself.
Odegaard chose Madrid and immediately entered into an unusual hybrid schedule. He trained with Carlo Ancelotti’s first team during the week, alongside Marcos Llorente and Borja Mayoral — two of the club’s other highly-rated young talents. It was only on the final session of the week that Odegaard would drop down to the Castilla (reserve) team, who compete in the third tier of Spanish football.
He did not get off to the best of starts.
“He made his debut against Amorebieta and played 45 minutes on a pitch that was all mud; the water was up to our ankles,” says former Castilla team-mate Jorge Franco Alviz, known as Burgui. “Zidane had to change (substitute) him at half-time and in the locker room Odegaard kept saying, ‘Disaster, disaster’. He touched the ball twice, I think.”
Odegaard started regularly for Zidane’s B team but only registered one goal and one assist in 11 appearances. The media attention and wonderkid tag did not always sit well with other players in the Castilla team who were watching those matches from the bench despite working hard in training all week.
The two heads of youth at Madrid, Paco de Gracia and Ramon Martinez, asked Burgui to help Odegaard adapt because the newcomer was so shy. He improved over time but tended to avoid large groups and preferred to socialise with just one or two team-mates instead.
Odegaard’s father Hans, now manager of Norwegian club Lillestrom, moved to Spain with his son and was given a job coaching Madrid’s under-11 team. Football Leaks later said Odegaard Sr’s contract was allegedly worth £2.7million, roughly 10 times what would normally be expected for that kind of job.
“His father was always with him. You would see him in the corridors, so he never really left him to be alone,” says Burgui.
“I tried to help him by putting him next to me at the locker in the dressing room, because I am very open. We trained together in the gym in the afternoons. Each Tuesday and Wednesday, we were together and that brought us closer. He was 16 and I was 21 but he was at Castilla level as he was so skilful. He had a spectacular last pass, as well as his ball striking. I had no doubt that he would get to where he is now.”
Top young talents still need an avenue to experience competitive games if they are not deemed ready for a club’s first team. Come the end of that first season, Ancelotti was still showing little interest in using Odegaard — he did not name him in a single squad until the league finale.
“I thought, ‘I don’t care if he comes or not, because he’s not going to play for me now’,” recalls Ancelotti in a chapter from his 2016 autobiography Quiet Leadership, about how he focuses on managing rather than the power dynamics at clubs.
“He could go on to be the best player in the world after I’m gone, but I’m not interested in the signing because it isn’t of importance to my job,” he continued.
“Of course, when he came, I treated him with the same respect I would give to any young player, but why would I want to be involved in his recruitment? He is being recruited for the future, for other managers after my time.”
Odegaard did become part of Ancelotti’s tenure, however, when he was introduced 58 minutes into a 7-3 home win over Getafe that late May afternoon, replacing reigning Ballon d’Or winner Cristiano Ronaldo.
It was a strange game to come into. There was a wild scoreline in Madrid’s last game of the season but a flat atmosphere due to it being a trophyless campaign for the club. He may have masterminded Madrid’s long-awaited 10th Champions League triumph a year earlier, but Ancelotti knew this failure meant these were likely his final minutes in charge.
Despite that, he acquiesced to the pressure applied by club president Florentino Perez to give Odegaard his debut.
“It is still vital to respect the vision of the owners,” said Ancelotti. “Perez was well known for his galacticos approach, where the biggest and most expensive superstars in world football are recruited, so players would arrive and depart who would not necessarily have been my choice, but it was my job to make the team work with whatever assets I was given.
“It is a waste of time and energy to fight against something that has already happened — you must manage it. After all, that is why we are called managers. If the president decides that, for a PR exercise, he needs the Norwegian boy to play three games with the first team, I will work out a way of doing that.”
Rafael Benitez took over that summer but was sacked midway through the following season and replaced with Zidane, who knew Odegaard’s game from his time coaching him in the Castilla team. Yet Odegaard did not play a single minute in 2015-16, and made it into only one matchday squad.
The midfield options at Madrid still included Casemiro, Toni Kroos, Mateo Kovacic, Luka Modric, Isco, James Rodriguez and Llorente, which meant Odegaard and Llorente had to get regular game time from somewhere.
“There was no directive (to play them),” says Luis Miguel Ramis, who moved up from coaching the under-19 squad to take over as Castilla head coach in January 2016. “They were very good kids, so it was normal for them to play. I only remember once, in a game in Castilla La Mancha, on a very bad pitch, that I took him (Odegaard) off at half-time. The boy was lost.
“What happened is that, because he was so young, he wasn’t yet able to keep up with the competitive pace of the first team or go at the same speed. With us, the league we were in meant a lot of defensive work. He was a boy who was used to looking forwards and when he came to us, we had to work to get him to start looking backwards, and it was a bit more difficult for him.”
While Odegaard was playing in the Spanish third division, he was also regularly starting for Norway’s national team. Norway were benefiting from a long-term investment in his talent, made at a very early age, as they sought to promote him and build a side around him.
“We were discussing whether we could nominate (pick) a 15-year-old, going back and forward,” says Fjortoft. “I said, ‘Is he among the best 18 players in Norway?’, and we all agreed. One of the reasons we took him in was that we felt it was a great idea for him and his family to use the expertise and knowledge in and around the national team.
“For him to come to the national team was a great way to escape everything. The coach, Per-Mathias Hogmo, was very supportive and saw that he had to build him, to understand what a valuable asset he will be for the future of Norwegian football. He was brilliant, as a lot of coaches don’t always speak with the players a lot as they have others who will do it but he was close to Martin.
“I remember the first game Martin played. He came on, and the players just started giving him the ball. There was an acceptance of him demanding the ball and demanding the next one even if he had lost it. The best players have that.”
In Madrid, Odegaard was viewed as a little introverted but a very good team-mate and a professional in terms of training. However, there was a sense he was caught between two camps and his development stalled.
“He trained very little with us, he was always with the first team,” says Castilla team-mate Burgui. “He told me he would like to train with us for two or three days, because there were times when the first team was resting or the workload was very low because they had played Champions League the previous night. Because of the language and not being in daily dynamics with us, when he came, he didn’t understand the exercises at all.”
Odegaard played 23 games in the Norwegian top division after making his debut aged 15 years and 118 days. He became his country’s youngest international four months later and had won nine caps by March 2016, when he was still only 17.
Although many on the outside world expected Odegaard to be part of the Madrid first team, there was a feeling shared internally by some staff that even the Castilla side was too quick a step to make.
“You could see he was different on a technical level, but he struggled with the language and the tactical patterns,” says a senior Madrid academy source, speaking on the condition of anonymity to protect relationships.
“With Jose Gil (assistant to Ramis), he didn’t connect very well. Jose used to give him a lot of stick. The kid didn’t cause any problems but they even asked for him to go to the Juvenil A (youth) team.
“I would have put him in Juvenil A and stimulated him with appearances with Castilla, little by little. He would have had more security and time. He was not like Rodrygo or Vinicius Junior years later, who arrived ready-made. He was very anarchic (in his play), but when he was training with the ball, he was a crazy thing. He had arrived from a culture based on the technical, and that weighed him down.”
With no first-team pathway emerging at Madrid, Odegaard joined Dutch side Heerenveen on loan in January 2017. He spent 18 months there and a further year on loan in the same country at Vitesse Arnhem, playing 82 times as he posted expected assist (xA) numbers which made him by far the most creative under-21 talent in any of Europe’s major leagues.
The lack of goals and assists, combined with the lower level of competition, skewed the success of his time in the Netherlands. Odegaard was out of sight and out of mind — a player who had become less relevant because he was not doing it at the very top level, as had been expected.
When he returned to Madrid in summer 2019, he was still not deemed ready to break through at senior level. Instead, he joined Real Sociedad on a season-long loan and established himself as La Liga-ready, helping the Basque club to a sixth-place finish and to win the Copa del Rey, starting and scoring the first goal in a 4-3 victory over his parent club in the Bernabeu in the quarter-finals.
Having settled at a team who were playing European football, the prospect of extending his stay in San Sebastian seemed like a sensible one. It looked like it might happen, too, until Madrid tempted Odegaard back aboard the mothership with the promise of the first-team role with them he had been seeking for five years.
“All I can say is that he was very happy here,” says a Real Sociedad source, speaking anonymously to protect relationships. “Only a call from Zidane telling him that he was counting on him and that he would be important at Madrid led him not to continue for a second year. Martin wanted to stay.”
Zidane’s style of football was less structured and gave way to more back-and-forth games rather than being a possession-dominant side every week. Isco and Marcelo were two victims of that, and there was a belief that it did not suit Odegaard either.
True to his word, Zidane started Odegaard in the first two league games of the season but he was taken off at half-time away to Real Betis in the second one with his team trailing, 2-1. Isco replaced him and Madrid turned it around to win, 3-2. Odegaard dropped out of the team and two muscle injuries meant he started just one more league game and two more Champions League matches.
By that December, Odegaard was 22 years old and had played just 489 minutes for Madrid in almost six years.
The loan to Arsenal for the rest of that season had the potential to be an unsettling experience, another new country with a different style of football and no knowledge of whether it would just be a stopover for six months.
Four years on, Odegaard has made 174 appearances for the north London club. It took him time to find his top level but in Mikel Arteta he found a manager who believed in him and has designed Arsenal’s right flank to maximise his strengths in small spaces.
Odegaard has no regrets over his decision to join Madrid as he saw it as the best education in world football at the time. There were moments during the journey when he did not know whether he was coming or going but that series of loans made him stronger.
Entering so many different changing rooms with the weight of his name hanging over him is not easy but it has built leadership qualities in him and Arteta saw fit to give him the captain’s armband ahead of the 2022-23 season, having made the transfer permanent for an initial £30million the previous summer.
“People talk about players as if they are machines, but he is like any 16-year-old leaving home to go to college for the first time,” said Fjortoft. “When I was 16, I didn’t want to go to my grandparents’ house 30km (18 miles) away because I missed home. It is all down to the mind, the toughness.
“There were people who thought he could just walk into the Madrid team and be the best player, but thankfully he has always had a good team around him. There are not many wonderkids who turned their talent into the career he has got. A few. like Wayne Rooney (after he joined Manchester United aged 18), go: trophy, trophy, trophy. But Martin had to go down and then back up, which is amazing.
“Don’t underestimate him by the way he looks. He is one of the most consequence-thinking people I have met. He looks like a guy the Vikings would have said no to, as he is not tall or brutal enough, but I would take him on any ship.”
Arteta has chosen Odegaard to steer Arsenal and now the only — albeit most difficult — task they have left is to make the transition from challengers into winners.
Additional reporting: Mario Cortegana, Guillermo Rai and Dermot Corrigan
(Top photos: Getty Images; design: Dan Goldfarb)
Sports
Alabama fan interrupts C-SPAN's Trump inauguration coverage with complaint about College Football Playoff
An Alabama Crimson Tide fan was still upset with his team being left out of the College Football Playoff and decided to interrupt President Donald Trump’s inauguration coverage with his complaints.
The fan, identified as Graham from New Jersey, dialed up the number for C-SPAN and fired off the hottest take of the year so far.
“I’m a bit more disappointed in the selection committee for not picking Alabama for the College Football Playoff finals,” the man said. “Accepting interior teams like SMU and Indiana – truly dark times in America.”
C-SPAN ended the call and moved back to inauguration coverage.
NORTH CAROLINA FOOTBALL GM MAINTAINS BILL BELICHICK WILL STAY AT SCHOOL, SAYS NFL CAN GET TOO POLITICAL
Alabama didn’t really have a case over the other 12 teams that were chosen for the expanded College Football Playoff. The Crimson Tide finished 9-3 in the regular season and lost to unranked Vanderbilt, No. 11 Tennessee and unranked Oklahoma.
Three losses against SEC opponents put them on the outside looking in when it came to the conference championship game. Alabama couldn’t save face either as they lost to Michigan in the ReliaQuest Bowl on Dec. 31. It was the second straight season the Wolverines eliminated the Crimson Tide in a bowl game.
Alabama has star talent on both sides of the ball but will have to deal with the loss of Jalen Milroe going into the 2025 season. Milroe declared for the NFL Draft.
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Sports
Prep talk: Stan Delus has Etiwanda girls' basketball team back making noise
Don’t ever underestimate Etiwanda and girls’ basketball coach Stan Delus.
The two-time defending state champions started the season a little wobbly with a three-game losing streak in November. The first Southern Section rankings had the Eagles at No. 17, which got lots of laughs.
The Eagles (16-4) are now on a 12-game winning streak after a 74-65 victory over St. Louis Incarnate World Academy in Springfield, Mass., on Monday, ending the Red Knights’ 141-game winning streak.
“We’re starting to jell at the right time,” Delus said. “It was a very important win in a sense we wanted to keep our momentum. We have the hardest playoff division in the country.”
Aliyahna Morris finished with 26 points, making eight of nine free throws, in the win Monday.
It all means the Eagles are ready to challenge Ontario Christian, Sierra Canyon and Mater Dei for the Southern Section Open Division championship. Delus always has his team playing its best when the playoffs begin in February and it’s happening again. …
After 16 days of not playing because of the Palisades fires, Brentwood’s boys basketball team finally resumed its season on Monday at the South Pasadena one-day event. The Eagles are playing four games this week, including three Gold Coast League games. The team had one player lose his family home.
“We’re wrapping our arms around him,” coach Ryan Bailey said.
Bailey expected his 18-2 team to be a little rusty, but added, “Everything will start clicking. These are 14- to 18-year-old kids who love playing for each other.”
This is a daily look at the positive happenings in high school sports. To submit any news, please email eric.sondheimer@latimes.com.
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